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A new study has found that being exposed to vape smoke while in utero can alter the shape of a baby's skull. Researchers from ...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that people aged 18 to 24 are most likely to use e-cigarettes among all adults, and adults 18 to 44 — Gen Zers and millennials — are ...
Startling new research indicates that even without nicotine, in utero exposure to two primary ingredients in e-cigarettes can alter fetal development, specifically skull shape.
Cray is continuing this work, next planning to vaporize nicotine in mouse studies to mimic the effects of e-cigarettes on head and face development in offspring. His lab is also studying nicotine’s ...
Maternal exposure to e-cigarettes or nicotine has been linked to increased incidence of Infant Skull Deformity, reports a new study. Breastfeeding mothers who use e-cigarettes or nicotine ...
Lactating mothers who use e-cigarettes or nicotine replacement therapies may be putting their breastfed babies at risk for skull defects, a new study in animals suggests. Cigarette smoking has already ...